The practice of bringing complete attention and love to simple daily interactions, transforming ordinary moments into sacred language-building opportunities.
Rabia found the Divine in every moment; she taught that devotion sanctifies the ordinary. For caregivers of young children, this means infusing routine moments—diaper changes, meals, transitions, cleanup—with full presence and love. These moments are language-rich opportunities. When an adult speaks during a meal with genuine attention ("You love the sweet potato," "We're sharing this table"), language becomes woven into belonging rather than floating as abstract instruction. In play and boundary-setting moments, pure devotion means the adult's full heart is present, not divided by phone or worry. Children sense this presence and it changes how they absorb language. They learn words feel safe because they're spoken by someone who truly cares. This quality of presence is especially critical during boundary moments ("Your body needs space now"); when delivered with pure devotion rather than frustration, children learn boundaries are acts of love.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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